You can’t rewind
a pet’s life
Jennifer Vanderau
Cumberland Valley Animal Shelter
(8/2019) I am moderately worried about my addiction to
rewinding live television. I use it somewhat religiously.
It’s amazing to me when I’m
watching my favorite show and can’t exactly make out what
one of the characters said, I simply push the rewind
button and find out. Or when there’s a particularly
touching moment or a great line I want to remember to talk
to friends about, boom. Rewind button.
Sharon Carter’s memorial to her
Aunt Peggy in Captain America: Civil War gets backed up
pretty much every time it’s on my television. Ugh. What a
great speech.
With all that in mind, I was on my
way to work a while ago and in one of the yards I passed
by I noticed a little girl walking up to a swing set being
followed by a cute looking dog. Obviously the pup belonged
to the family and it appeared to me that he was watching
over the little girl as she played, doing his job
protecting her.
It was as close to a Normal
Rockwell painting come to life as I’ve ever seen.
As I drove by, I thought to
myself, oh let me rewind to watch that again.
No joke. That thought actually
went through my head.
I’m not terribly proud of this
moment. I’m sure my mother is not all that fond to read
that, either.
In the car, now well-beyond the
aforementioned adorable scene, I had to blink a few times
to allow the whole thing to really take hold in my brain.
Once I truly realized what I had just done, I had a pretty
monumental epiphany.
Despite the fact that all this
really goes without saying, I had to remind myself that
for as much as I enjoy the rewind button on my television,
life does NOT have that particular innovation.
Being a student of Eastern
Philosophy and acupuncture for almost ten years now, I’ve
heard a lot of talk about the importance of living in the
moment and being present.
One of my very favorite quotes
comes from Master Oogway in Kung Fu Panda. "Yesterday is
history. Tomorrow is a mystery. Today is a gift. That’s
why it is called the present."
What really matters is the here
and now. We can’t rewind it, we can’t predict it, so the
only other option is to fully experience it.
Give your focus, your attention,
your concentration to the present. You might be surprised
at what you encounter.
I am a ghost tour guide in
Gettysburg and last month, I took a group of middle school
kids from Seattle, WA, out to try to scare them. It
worked. They were awesome and a ton of fun and when they
left, they were seriously worried about what might be
waiting for them in their hotel room from the other side
of the veil.
It was so much fun.
There was a moment, though, during
the tales when a lightning bug buzzed into the center of
the half-circle the kids had formed around me. Being from
the west coast, they had never seen a lightning bug
before.
Normally, on ghost tours I’m
focused on the stories and what time it is and where I am
because I know I have to get the group back on time to the
buses. It really is a great part time job, but you do have
to keep to a schedule.
But seeing the absolute awe on
those kids’ faces gave me pause. For a minute, I let them
watch the twinkling insect as it flickered around them.
One of them tried to catch the bug and I said, "Go ahead,
they don’t bite."
It was a moment of purity, of true
authenticity to witness young kids experience something
like that for the first time. And I deliberately let it
happen. I didn’t worry about the time or getting to my
next story stop.
I’m glad I did because it was
really neat to observe and be a part of that
guilelessness.
The opportunity arose again a few
weeks ago when I took two utterly adorable kittens from
CVAS to a local daycare. I talked to the children about
the shelter and what we do. We told stories and I got to
hear all about the kids and their animals and how one
little girl believes that she is a rainbow superhero.
It really is a glorious world of
random when you’re around kids five and younger.
When it was time for them to say
hello to my kittens, I sat on a chair and they came up one
by one. For that instant, I stopped looking at the clock
and worrying about where I needed to be. Instead, I
watched as each one of them stood beside me and very
gently petted the kitten on my lap.
The little black-and-white feline
actually started purring midway through the introductions.
None of my cats at home would ever be that chill. This
little guy was an amazing cat (needless to say he got
adopted really quickly).
When one of the little girls
leaned down and gave the kitten the softest of kisses on
his head, I think my heart may have actually contracted in
my chest.
It was a connection to child-like
wonder and excitement and forgetting about my to-do list
allowed me to truly enjoy it.
Following that visit, I had to
stop by an office that helps the shelter and instead of
bringing the kittens back to the shelter first, I took
them along with me. Oh my word, did the employees love
that. I swear I saw more people that worked there in just
one hour than I have for an entire year.
I turned my brain away from
everything waiting for me on my desk and just watched them
all interact with those little squirts.
You know what I noticed? Their
expressions mirrored the ones of the daycare kids — for a
moment those adults became children again. Animals really
do bring out the best in all of us and when you see that
unadulterated joy, you can’t help but catch the feeling.
Imagine if I hadn’t been focused
on all those seemingly small moments. What if I’d been
paying more attention to my watch than what was happening
around me? How sad to have missed out on sharing that kind
of delight.
I can’t rewind life like I can the
Captain America movies. If I miss something in the real
world, then I miss it.
Maybe there’s a reason for that.
Maybe that keeps us grounded, in the here-and-now, so that
the best parts of life don’t pass us by.
How often are you distracted by
where you have to be and what you have to do instead of
engrossed in the moment? What could you be missing?
If you keep your eyes open and
mind turned off to the endless chatter of "should haves"
and "have to do’s," you might be really charmed and
grateful for what you get to see.
I love my rewind button for
television, but when it comes to life, there’s no going
back, so the here-and-now is where I want to stay.
*****
Jennifer Vanderau is the Director of Communications for the Cumberland Valley Animal Shelter in Chambersburg, Pa., and can be reached at cvasoc@innernet.net. The shelter accepts both monetary and pet supply donations. For more information, call the shelter at (717) 263-5791 or visit the website www.cvas-pets.org.
Read other articles by Jennifer Vanderau